Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- 1 Introduction: Marxism, modernity and postcolonial studies
- Part I Eurocentrism, “the West,” and the world
- Part II Locating modernity
- 6 Misplaced ideas? Locating and dislocating Ireland in colonial and postcolonial studies
- 7 Liberation theory: variations on themes of Marxism and modernity
- 8 Sex, space and modernity in the work of Rashid Jahan, “Angareywali”
- 9 Was there a time before race? Capitalist modernity and the origins of racism
- Part III Marxism, postcolonial studies, and “theory”
- References
- Index
8 - Sex, space and modernity in the work of Rashid Jahan, “Angareywali”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- 1 Introduction: Marxism, modernity and postcolonial studies
- Part I Eurocentrism, “the West,” and the world
- Part II Locating modernity
- 6 Misplaced ideas? Locating and dislocating Ireland in colonial and postcolonial studies
- 7 Liberation theory: variations on themes of Marxism and modernity
- 8 Sex, space and modernity in the work of Rashid Jahan, “Angareywali”
- 9 Was there a time before race? Capitalist modernity and the origins of racism
- Part III Marxism, postcolonial studies, and “theory”
- References
- Index
Summary
It is not possible for the colonized society and the colonizing society to agree to pay tribute, at the same time and in the same place, to a single value … The truth objectively expressed is constantly vitiated by the lie of the colonial situation.
(Frantz Fanon, “Medicine and Colonialism”)Some five decades before the Rushdie affair, Rashid Jahan, a young Muslim woman in India, was warned by newspaper announcements to retract the two stories she had contributed to a collection in Urdu called Angarey (Live Coals). She was also threatened with kidnapping and disfigurement; community leaders denounced her and her three male collaborators. Friends urged her to employ a bodyguard; she did not do so, saying that it would interfere with her work as a doctor in poor areas. Angarey came out in 1932. Within months, the British government had banned it, citing section 295A of the Indian Penal Code which targets any person who, “with deliberate and malicious intention,” attempts to “outrag[e] … the religious feelings of any class of His Majesty's subjects, by words either spoken or written, or by visible representations” (104). As a woman, and one who had chosen to write about sexual harassment, birth control, pregnancy, abortion, and women's health, Rashid Jahan (called “Angareywali” or “The ‘Angarey’ Woman” by some) became the symbol of the cultural violence allegedly perpetrated by the collection of stories.
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- Marxism, Modernity and Postcolonial Studies , pp. 150 - 166Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
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